Prague Bookfair and the politics of Saudi sponsorship
The Index on Censorship old guard are out in force at the Prague book fair this year, for the inaugural George Theiner award — Michael Scammell, the founding editor, Philip Spender, who worked for Index from the early days until the mid-90s and is nephew of the poet Stephen Spender, who set up Index’s founding charity, and a number of former Index researchers and writers. Theiner was a Czech dissident who edited the magazine in the 1980s and published the leading Czech writers of the day, including Vaclav Havel. Index is still revered in the Czech Republic for publishing censored writers at the height of the cold war and George Theiner was one of the key figures. He was affectionately remembered today as a man who never changed a car tyre — his wife did that job — but who was deeply humane. The multicultural Index office was described as a haven for any writer or visitor who happened to pass by. The Theiner award was the brainchild of his son, Pavel, and the first recipient is a celebrated Polish translator, Andrzej Jagodzinski. (more…)


